A week after Argentina's First Lady Cristina Kirchner was confirmed as the government's candidate for the October presidential election, several public opinion polls show her vote intention rating on the rise and closing in on that of her husband President Nestor Kirchner. But there are also surprising replies about the president's political comeback project for 2011.
The European Central Bank, as forecasted, kept its key interest rate at 4% on Thursday, but President Jean-Claude Trichet hinted of future rate hikes in response to continued growth in Germany, Italy and other European countries.
The National Statistics Institute (INE) revealed this week that Chile's Consumer Price Index increased 0.9% in June. That figure is nearly double the 0.5% monthly government projection, and it revived calls for higher interest rates to calm inflation worries.
Experts from Chile's National Forestry Service (CONAF) and the Valdivia Center for Scientific Studies (Cecs) this week linked the May disappearance of a glacial lake in far southern Chile to global warming. The team made these claims after a series of visits to the site of the lost lake starting Thursday, and noted there is a possibility that the lake could reform.
Brazil's president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva admitted Friday the existence of problems between Brasilia and Caracas, although he downplayed the tone of the dispute with his Venezuelan counterpart Hugo Chavez, whom he called my friend.
Argentina has no excuse to avoid repaying private German sovereign bond holders who lost out in the worst sovereign debt collapse in modern history, Germany's top court said Friday.
Several outstanding United States officials will be visiting friendly countries in South America to promote political and trade links in the framework of what has been described as the year of the US commitment with Latinamerica.
Royal Dutch Shell is to launch a new exploration campaign in the Arctic north of Alaska in a bid to tap the region's vast oil and gas reserves.
About 100 million votes were cast by the Internet and cellphone text messages, said New7Wonders, the nonprofit organization that conducted the poll.
The first bid in a 5.2 billion-dollar project to widen the Panama Canal was issued on Friday to a Panamanian company, officials said.